Authors: Paul Finch
Tags: #Fiction, #Crime, #Mystery & Detective, #Contemporary Women, #General, #Thrillers, #Women Sleuths, #Suspense
Heck’s teeth locked together. In these circs, hanging back like felt like a non-option. These were fellow coppers pumping out their last. He pressed cautiously on. And then heard a sound of breaking glass from inside the flat.
‘Crap!’ He dashed forward, only for a door to open behind him. He spun around, gun levelled. The thin-faced Chinese woman who peeked out gaped in horror. ‘Police officer!’ he hissed. ‘Go back inside! Stay there!’ The door slammed and Heck resumed his advance, radio back to his lips. ‘This is Heck … suspect’s making a break for it through a window. It’s three floors down, so I don’t know how he’s going to manage it. But his flat’s on the building’s northeast side, which looks down onto Charlton Court … we’ve got to get some cover down there, over.’
Even as he said it, Heck knew this would be easier said than done. The surveillance team on Fairfax House was no more than eight-strong at any time. Even with Gemma on the plot, that only made it nine – so they were spread widely and thinly. On top of that, though armed and wearing vests, they were geared for close target reconnaissance, not a gun-battle. No doubt, Trojan units would be en route, but how long it would take them in the mid-evening London traffic was anyone’s guess. Heck slid to another halt as a dark shape appeared at the farthest end of the corridor, about twenty yards last number 36. By its size and breadth, and by the luminous council-worker doublet pulled over its donkey jacket, he recognised it as Gary Quinnell, whose lying-up position Heck had briefly forgotten was on one of the floors above. The burly Welshman had also drawn his firearm, and was in the process of pulling on the regulation baseball cap.
They acknowledged each other with a nod, then Heck lowered his weapon and proceeded, stopping again about five yards from the shattered doorway. ‘Armed police!’ he shouted. ‘John Sagan … we are armed police officers! There’s no point in resisting any further! Stop this bloody nonsense, and throw your weapon out!’
There was no reply. No further glass crashed or tinkled.
They were now a couple of yards to either side of the front door. From this close range, it was plain that Reg Cowling was dead. His face had been blown away; in fact, his head had almost detached, and hung lopsided from stands of glistening crimson muscle. However, Bishop, while wounded in the face, which was riddled with gashes and splinters, and the right shoulder, which resembled raw beefsteak through the rents in his smouldering sports jacket, was vaguely conscious. He was ashen-cheeked, but his eyes, which by some miracle had both survived, were visible beneath fluttering, blood-dabbled lashes.
‘Bastard went for head-shots,’ Heck said tightly. ‘Expected them to be wearing body-armour.’
Penny Flint had told them John Sagan was a professional killer. Here was the proof.
‘This is Heck,’ he said into his radio. ‘Update on the casualties … both in a collapsed state and suffering extensive gunshot injuries. DS Cowling appears to be dead, DC Bishop is conscious and breathing … how long for, I can’t say. We still can’t reach them.’
Gemma’s response broke continually and was delivered in a breathless voice, which indicated she was running. Before he could make sense of it, it was blotted out by another explosion of glass from inside the flat.
‘He’s going for it!’ Quinnell warned. ‘Must have decided the coast’s clear!’
‘I repeat, we are armed police officers!’ Heck shouted. ‘Throw your weapon out!’
The answer came in a third shuddering
BOOM!
, and what remained of the front door was blasted outward. Again, DC Bishop got lucky. The shot was directed above him, so though he was bombarded by wreckage, and gasped in agony, he was spared further pellet-wounds.
A loud
clunk/clack
from inside signified that a fourth shell had been ratcheted into place.
‘Pump-action!’ Heck said.
More glass detonated as it was struck from its frame. The detectives locked eyes across the open doorway, both their brows beaded with sweat.
‘We can’t just let him run,’ Heck said.
Quinnell didn’t argue the point.
Heck swallowed the apple-sized lump of phlegm in his throat, and then wheeled partly around into the doorway, only his left arm, left shoulder and the left side of his head visible as he tried to pinpoint the target. Quinnell did the same from the other side.
But the immediate area, which was an actual living room, was bare of life. There was no sign of the guy. None at all.
They were vaguely aware of plain, simple furnishings as they scanned the place, of bookshelves that were empty, of bland pictures on the walls. But there were also doors to other areas, one on the left and one on the right. On the far side of the room stood three tall sash-windows. The left one had been smashed outwards.
‘Doors first,’ Heck said, running right, but finding only an empty bathroom. ‘Clear!’ he yelled, spinning back.
Quinnell had gone left. He reappeared from the bedroom. ‘Clear.’
Heck darted for the broken window, which had had to be broken because by the looks of it, Sagan had only been able to lift the lower panel several inches. He flattened himself against the wall alongside it, and risked a quick glance. Some twenty feet below, a fair-headed figure in dark clothing – what looked like a heavy overcoat – and with the shotgun hung over its shoulder by a strap, was scampering away across the top of five flat-roofed garages standing in a terraced row. It was instantly apparent how he’d got down there. Some five yards to the left of the window, about six feet above it, there was a horizontal steel grating – the platform section of an old-fashioned fire-escape. The fire-escape stair dropped steeply down on the far side of that. There was no possibility of reaching either the stair of the platform by jumping. But the killer had prepared for this in advance by connecting a knotted rope to the underside of the grating, and looping it over a hook alongside his window, where it would hang down the apartment house wall unobtrusively. All he’d had to do when the time came was get a firm grip, unhook it so that it swung away from the window, thus preventing anyone in pursuit using the same method, and slither down to the garage roofs.
Heck gazed dully at the hanging rope, swaying in the winter breeze a good five feet away. He was vaguely aware of Quinnell appearing alongside him.
‘Bastard!’ the Welshman said, spying the dwindling form of Sagan as he reached the far end of the garage roofs.
About sixty yards to the right of these, a uniformed police car swung over the grass into Charlton Court from the cul-de-sac at the front of the building. Unfortunately, this was only a divisional patrol – almost certainly it was responding to the call that had just gone out, and would have got here before anyone else because it was in the vicinity. But it wouldn’t be armed, which rendered it next to useless. Besides, Sagan had now jumped from the left side of the garage roofs onto Bellfield Lane, which led away at a much lower level. As well as the rugged, rubbish-strewn slope slanting down to this, there was a high mesh fence along its edge, which formed an impassable barrier for vehicles. Sagan was a rapidly diminishing shape as he raced away along the lower road, intermittently vanishing as he ran through the patches of darkness between the streetlights. Still there was no sign of a Trojan unit.
‘Check the casualty,’ Heck said.
Quinnell nodded, and went quickly back across the flat.
Heck holstered his Glock and put his radio to his mouth. ‘This is DS Heckenburg … urgent message. Suspect, John Sagan, is at large and on foot … male IC1, mid-forties, fair-haired, wearing glasses and a dark, possibly black overcoat. Currently escaping northeast along Bellfield Lane. Warning, Sagan is armed with a pump shotgun and more than willing to use it. For the cerebrally challenged, that means he’s armed and dangerous. I repeat … John Sagan is armed and very dangerous!’ He bit his lip, and then added: ‘In pursuit.’
‘Hey …
whoa!
’ Gary Quinnell shouted, as Heck climbed up into the casement.
The hanging rope was only five feet away. Heck knew there was a good chance he’d make it, but he also knew that if he stopped to think about the chasm below – he wouldn’t go any further. So he didn’t think, just launched himself out, diving full-length – and dropping like a stone, maybe ten feet, before managing to catch hold of the rope. Even then, several feet of cold, greasy hemp slid through his fingers before he bought himself to a halt, ripping both his gloves and the flesh of the palms underneath.
Doing his best to ignore the blistering pain, he clambered down, alighting on the garage roof nearest the building. ‘Suspect heading northeast along Bellfield Lane!’ he shouted down to the two uniforms who’d spilled out onto Charlton Court from their patrol car, faces aghast at what they’d just seen. ‘Spread the word!’
Without waiting for a response, Heck ran due north along the flimsy roofs, feet drumming on damp planks covered only in tarpaper, jabbering into his radio again, giving instructions as best he could. At the far end, he skidded to a stop, dropped onto all fours, turned and swung his body over the parapet. He hung full-length, and then dropped the last five feet, before careering downhill through grass and clutter onto the road.
‘Bellfield Lane heading northeast,’ he shouted, hammering along the tarmac. ‘Any units in that direction to respond, over?’ But the airwaves were now jammed with cross-cutting messages. ‘Shit … come on, someone!’
As he ran, the vast concrete shape of a railway gantry loomed towards him. Above it, stroboscopic lights sped back and forth as trains hurtled between East Dulwich and Peckham Rye. Conversely, the shadows beneath the structure were oil-black, barely penetrated by the streetlights. The passage itself had been narrowed by corrugated fences thrown up left and right. In normal times this would be a muggers’ paradise, but Heck was openly armed, and besides the night was now alive with sirens – it was just a pity none were in the immediate vicinity.
Beyond the railway overpass, a sheer brick wall stood on the right, but on the left there was more wire fencing, and behind that another slope angling down to a glass-littered car park. The fence was quivering, as though something heavy had just passed over it or under it. More to the point, its second section was loose in the frame, disconnected along the bottom, giving easy access to the other side. Heck swerved towards it, only to find that his quarry, nicely camouflaged in his all-black garb, had secreted himself flat at the foot of the waiting slope, deep in the shadow of the overpass. The first Heck knew of this was the muzzle-flash, and then the hail of shot that swept the wire mesh.
He threw himself onto the pavement, rolling away fast and landing in the gutter – where he remained, flat on his back, gun trained two-handed on the wall of fencing.
Until he heard feet clattering away again.
He scrambled up to his knees. A dark shape was haring off across the car park below, at the far side of which a concrete ramp led down onto yet another housing estate, this one comprising rows of near-identical maisonettes. Heck slid under the fence and gave chase, stumbling down the slope until he reached the level tarmac, all the time trying to get through on his radio.
‘Is no one fucking listening to me?’ he shouted. ‘For what it’s worth … still in pursuit, suspect still on foot, still armed, opening fire at every opportunity. Heading west onto the Hawkwood estate. Listen … this is a built-up area with lots of civvies. Not many around at present, but someone’s got to get over here fast. Over and fucking out!’
At the foot of the ramp, he vaulted a railing and ran along a boulevard faced on two sides by front doors and ground-level windows. Sagan was still in sight at the far end – a minuscule figure, which abruptly wheeled around, levelled the shotgun at its waist and fired twice. Heck was out of lethal range – Sagan was using buckshot rather than solid slugs – but instinct still sent him scrambling for cover behind a bench. Quickly, he knelt back up – Sagan remained visible, but it went against all the rules to open fire in a residential zone like this. You didn’t even need to be a poor shot; ricochets could go anywhere.
To make matters worse, several doors had opened as curious householders peeked out.
Sagan darted left along a side-street. Heck vaulted the bench and gave chase again, shouting at the onlookers as he did. ‘Police! Lock your doors … stay away from the windows!’
He rounded the corner and descended a flight of steps into a covered area. Sagan was again visible, framed in the exit on the other side of it. He let off two more rounds. Heck dived sideways, smashing through a decayed wooden hoarding and entangling himself in heaps of musty, second-hand furniture. Fighting his way out through a rear door, he sprinted along an alley, hoping to head the bastard off – only to emerge into another car park. Again, Sagan was waiting, shotgun levelled.
Heck ran low, scuttling behind a row of parked vehicles. Sagan blasted each one of them twice, bodywork buckling, safety glass flying, before turning, ascending a flight of steps and dashing down a passage between high, faceless walls. Heck slid over the bonnet of the nearest wreck and charged up the steps. He entered the passage, which was about fifty yards long; at the far end of it, Sagan was rapidly reloading. Before Heck could point his pistol and shout, the bastard fired, worked the slide, fired, worked the slide again; ear-shattering detonations in the narrow space. This time, as Heck pitched himself down, he pegged off three quick shots of his own, which caromed along the passage, missing their target but sending him ducking out of sight.
Heck retreated around his corner, wheezing, sucking in lungfuls of icy air. He risked a glance back. The passage still looked empty, but Sagan could be lying in wait, and once Heck was half way along he’d be a sitting duck. Instead, he ran back down the steps, along the front of a row of caged-off shops, and around the base of a tower-block. He’d expected to find open space on the other side, but instead there was the shell of an industrial building – a former soap-making factory by the scabby signs hanging loose on its outer wall.